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Chris's avatar

Why don’t you write about something that matters like how to get healthy fit and stay that way?

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Dan...'s avatar

> …Viruses, by their very nature, can only multiply within living cells but not in pure culture…

In general, they can live and survive only within living cells - we are told. If this is the case, why all virus research is done in laboratory conditions? Why not in a living person?

> …The particles of many viruses have very characteristic shapes…

Majority of viruses is said to be submicroscopic. Which means that we cannot see them. How do we know their physical properties if we cannot observe them in their live form, especially in their native environment?

EM is out of question because a) it records only dead “things”, b) the sample preparation process destroys everything of the original material, c) the field of vision which allows “observation” is absurdly miniature, and most important - d) the absence of repeatability of the process (both sample preparation and actual observation).

Full-scale EM would be great - but it would have to include ongoing _live_ observation over extended periods of time of the same sample and the same (FOV) portion of the sample. A movie, if you like. Is it possible with EM?

Are there any lab techniques which allow such recordable, continuous, movie-like observation of live viruses?

For the record, I am not for or against. I can see a lot of gaps and assumptions, along with plenty of unanswered questions. Or questions answered in a funny non-scientific way, like “we know that…” or “so many authors wrote about it…”

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